Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Masako Nashimoto


Related Topics

In the News (Mon 8 Sep 08)

  
  Bangja, Crown Princess Euimin of Korea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born Princess Nashimotonomiya Masako of Japan, she was the first daughter of Prince Nashimotonomiya Morimasa, the seventh son of Prince Kuninomiya Asahiko, an adopted son of Emperor Ninko of Japan, and his beautiful wife, Princess Itsuko, a daughter of Marquis Naohiro Nabeshima.
She was a first cousin of Empress Nagako of Japan, the wife of Emperor Hirohito and the mother of Emperor Akihito, and Princess Yoshiko, a wife of Prince Gun of Korea.
1945 Princess Masako (born 8 December 1926) (his paternal second cousin), the eldest daughter of Prince Kuninomiya Asaakira, marriage dissolved 1979; adopted by Princess Itsuko, the mother of Princess Bangja, 28 April 1966, made legal heir of the former Nashimotonomiya Family; changed surname to Nashimoto.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Masako_Nashimoto   (832 words)

  
 Masako - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Princess Nashimoto Masako of Japan (梨本宮方子女王), later Crown Princess Bangja of Korea;
Princess Masako (Tsune no miya Masako Naishinnō), 6th daughter, (30 September 1888–8 March 1940), of the Meiji Emperor;
Lady Hojo Masako (北条 政子), later known as the "Nun Shogun" (尼将軍);
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Masako   (133 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Bangja, Crown Princess of Korea
Bang-ja (方子 방자 bang ja) of Korea (4 November, 1901 - 30 April, 1989, Nashimoto Palace, Tokyo) was the consort of Crown Prince Eun of Korea.
Born Princess Nashimoto Masako of Japan, she was the first child of Prince Nashimoto Morimasa of Japan and his wife Princess Itsuko, a daughter of Marquis Naohiro Nabeshima.
Princess Masako (Bang-ja's former japanese name) married Eun, Crown Prince of Korea, on 28 April 1920 at King Lee's Akasaka Palace, Toriizaka, Tokyo.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Bangja,_Crown_Princess_of_Korea   (274 words)

  
 Living Heads of Former Imperial Branch Families and Extinct Princely Households
Born 1940 in Tokyo, the eldest son of the late former Prince Takeda Tsuneyoshi and his wife, the former Sanjo Mitsuko, Prince Tsunetada became a commoner on October 14, 1947.
Kuniaki is married to the former Hirose Masako (born 1934) and has two sons and a daughter: Asatake (born 1958), Kuniharu (born 1962), and Akiko (born 1964).
Nashimoto-no-miya: Nashimoto Norihiko (3rd of the line, born November 19, 1922) is the adopted heir of the former Nashimoto no miya household.
www.geocities.com /jtaliaferro.geo/living.html   (1238 words)

  
 Funeral for heir of Joseon Dynasty - China History Forum, chinese history forum
The kanji of Princess Nashimoto Masako is 梨本宮方子女王 under Japanese Royal Family, the daughter of Prince Nashimoto Morimasa 梨本宮守正王.
Masako Nashimoto (方子 梨本) was from Japanese royal family.
She was one of the 3 candidate women to become the royal princess and spouse of Hirohito but failed because of she got diagnosed report of infertility.
chinahistoryforum.com /index.php?showtopic=5886&st=0&...&#entry4741014   (724 words)

  
 Gu, Prince Imperial Hoeun - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gu, Prince of Korea (aka Yi Ku, I Gu, Lee Gu) (29 December 1931 – 16 July 2005) was a claimant to the throne of Korea, contested twenty-ninth head of the Korean Imperial Household, and the grandson of Gojong of the Korean Joseon Dynasty.
Gu was born in Kitashirakawa Palace (now Akasaka Prince Hotel), Kioicho, Kojimachiku, Tokyo, Japan; his father was Crown Prince Eun of Korea, and his mother was Princess Bangja, born Masako Nashimoto, a Japanese princess.
If his claim had been accepted, and Korea were still a monarchy, his title would have been "His Imperial Highness the Crown Prince of Korea".
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Gu,_Prince_of_Korea   (492 words)

  
 Nashimoto Morimasa - TheBestLinks.com - August, August 8, August 18, August 30, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Nashimoto Morimasa - TheBestLinks.com - August, August 8, August 18, August 30,...
Nashimoto Morimasa, August, August 8, August 18, August 30, December, December...
You can add this article to your own "watchlist" and receive e-mail notification about all changes in this page.
www.thebestlinks.com /Nashimoto_Morimasa.html   (669 words)

  
 European/Japan royal marriages - The Royal Forums
Another Japanese lady with aristocratic background (I think she was called Masako) married to the last crown prince of Korea and they had 2 sons.
she was prince Nashimoto's eldest daughter, her younger son die recently in the hotel, it was his family's house before.
As for Yi Bangja(born as Nashimotonomiya Masako of Japan), she was betrothed to Crown Prince Eun of Korea because Korea was under Japanese rule(with the 1910 Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty), and she was misdiagnosed as infertility.
theroyalforums.com /forums/f68/european-japan-royal-marriages-8294.html   (1480 words)

  
 GHQ Reports on Japan's Imperial History: Part VI
(a) House of NASHIMOTO: Prince NASHIMOTO Morimasa was the fourth son of Prince KUNI Ashiko and a grandson of the Mr.
A field Marshal in the army and also a chief priest of the Grand Shrines of Ise, he was arrested as a war criminal and held in Sugamo Prison for more than a year, but was liberated in 1947 of lack of evidence.
Its purpose was to provide a place for MASAKO, the sixth illegitimate daughter of Emperor MEIJI, who married the Prince in 1903.
core.ecu.edu /hist/tuckerjo/ghqemps6.html   (1703 words)

  
 Genealogy of the House of Fushimi-no-miya
The younger sons of Prince Kuni Asahiko founded the princley houses of Kaya, Asaka, and Higashikuni; another son succeeded to the Nashimoto house.
Princess Masako (Masako Nyoō), titled Princess Yi Pangja after marriage; b.
Higashikuni-no-miya, 3 Nov. 1906; appointed prime minister 14 Aug. 1945 and resigned 9 Oct. 1945; divested of imperial title and became a commoner, 14 Oct. 1947, and adopted the surname Higashikuni; m.
www.geocities.com /jtaliaferro.geo/fushimi.html   (3816 words)

  
 LIST OF PERSONS
MASAKO, Tsune-no-Miya HIH Princess [30 SEP 1888 - 8 MAR 1940]
MIKASA MASAKO, HIH Princess [23 OCT 1951 - ]
NASHIMOTO MASAKO, Princess [4 NOV 1901 - 30 APR 1989]
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~royalty/japan/persons.html   (1530 words)

  
 Royal News: July 2005
Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako of Japan were greeted today by crowds at the U.K. pavilion at the Aichi World Expo.
Lee Ku was born in Tokyo in 1931 to Prince Yongchin - the younger brother of Choson¡'s last monarch Sunjong - and Masako Nashimoto.
However, they decided that the couple would go ahead with their visit because the Crown Prince serves as honorary president of the expo and Crown Princess Masako wanted to show to the people that she is fine.
www.nettyroyal.nl /newsjuly05.html   (6036 words)

  
 Korean throne’s last heir dies -DAWN - International; July 26, 2005
The world has been forgetting the existence of him, the last crown prince,” said You Hong-june, the head of South Korea’s cultural heritage administration.
Mr Lee’s father, a crown prince, was taken to Japan and married Princess Masako Nashimoto, a relative of the Japanese emperor.
The couple had two children, a son who died under suspicious circumstances as a child and Lee Ku, who grew up in Japan while Korea was under colonial rule.
www.dawn.com /2005/07/26/int13.htm   (475 words)

  
 Lee Ku, last heir of Korea's Joseon Dynasty, laid to rest Asian Political News - Find Articles   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Tens of thousands of people earlier Sunday gathered at Changdeok Palace, a royal residence in central Seoul for a state funeral, the last to be held for the royal family as Lee had no children, Yonhap News Agency reported.
They reportedly included Prime Minister Lee Hae Chan, who is related to the royal Lee clan, and former Japanese Ambassador to Seoul Toshiyuki Takano and Takao Nashimoto, Lee's Japanese nephew, who came as an emissary of the Japanese imperial family.
Lee's German-American ex-wife Julia Mullock could not participate in the funeral due to the royal family's opposition, but watched the ritual service from the other side of the street, the Korea Times reported.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m0WDQ/is_2005_July_25/ai_n14940671   (439 words)

  
 KOREA9
April 1920, H.I.H. Crown Princess (Wang-se-ja-bin) Pang-ja [Masako] (b.
Prince Nashimoto, GCVO, by his wife, H.I.H. Princess Itsuko, Princess Nashimoto, second daughter of H.E. Naohiro, 2
December 1931, younger son of H.I.H. Crown Prince Yi Un [Uimin], Prince Yong, GBE, by his wife, H.I.H. Crown Princess Pang-ja [Masako], elder daughter of Field Marshal H.I.H. Prince Morimasa, 2
www.4dw.net /royalark/Korea/korea9.htm   (982 words)

  
 Royal News: Royal News: Korea - Prince Yongchin Found Dead   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Yi, who divorced his American wife, Julia Mullock, in 1982, never had children, so his death signifies the end of the main lineage of the Choson¡'s royal descent.
Yi was born in Japan to Prince Yongchin and Masako Nashimoto.
Yongchin was the younger brother of Choson¡'s last monarch, Sunjong, and the seventh son of King Kojong, and the marriage was part of Japan's imperial ambition to merge Korea.
www.malefirst.co.uk /royal_family/75812004.htm   (384 words)

  
 Imperial Family of Japan Picture Thread - Page 2 - The Royal Forums
Princess Itsuko Nashimoto, the mistress of the household, is the mother of the Late Crown Princess Bangja of Korea (nee Masako).
Masako was a first cousin of the Late Empress Nagako.
Their weddings were held on September 28, 1928.
www.theroyalforums.com /forums/f68/imperial-family-japan-picture-thread-6672-2.html#post383057   (992 words)

  
 Gulf Times – Qatar’s top-selling English daily newspaper - Philippines/East Asia
Relatives and political leaders, flanked by men wearing the garb of civil servants in the Chosun period, said Lee’s life was symbolic of the pain Korea suffered under colonial rule.
Lee’s father, a crown prince, was taken to Japan and married Princess Masako Nashimoto, a relative of the Japanese emperor.
The couple had two children, a son who died under suspicious circumstances as a child and Lee Ku, who grew up in Japan while Korea was under colonial rule.-Reuters
www.gulf-times.com /site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=45768&version=1&template_id=45&parent_id=25   (456 words)

  
 Patentee Index
Yamamoto, Yuji; Nashimoto, Tomonobu; Nakashima, Tatsuo; and Fukuoka, Toru, to Makita Corporation Portable electric saw D0523718 Cl. D8-64.
Yudasaka, Ichio; Shimoda, Tatsuya; Kanbe, Sadao; and Miyazawa, Wakao, to Seiko Epson Corporation Thin film device provided with coating film, liquid crystal panel and electronic device, and method for making the thin film device 07067337 Cl. 438-21.
Iijima, Sumio; Yudasaka, Masako; and Koshio, Akira 07067096 Cl. 423-445B.
www.uspto.gov /web/patents/patog/week26/OG/patentee/alphaY.htm   (5247 words)

  
 The Royal Forums - Powered by vBulletin
The latest news and pictures, as well as profiles, suggested links, discussions and fan art for the Japanese imperial family.
Crown Prince Naruhito and Crown Princess Masako with Family
The latest news and pictures, as well as profiles, suggested links, discussions and fan art for the Jordanian royal family.
theroyalforums.com /forums/f68/imperial-family-japan-picture-thread-...   (661 words)

  
 Post Comment
The last Crown Prince of Korea, Prince Yi Eun, married a member of Japanese royalty, Princess Nashimoto Masako, at a time when Korea had already lost its sovereignty to the colonial power across the East Sea.
Familiarity with the history of the two nations will tell that the marriage was a set-up by imperial Japan to end the royal lineage of Korea because Princess Masako was thought to be infertile.
However, she managed to bore two sons, one of them Prince Gu.
rosesnchaos.livejournal.com /214461.html?mode=reply   (924 words)

  
 FUSHIMI
HIH Prince Nashimoto Moriosa, born 1st December 1819, died sp September 1881.
HIH Prince Fushimi Kuniye, 21st Prince Fushimi-no-miya 1841/1872, born 24th October 1802, married and had issue.
HIH Prince Kuni Asahiko, born 27th February 1824 in Kyoto, 1st Prince Kuni-no-miya [cr.1871], married (amongst others) Harada Mitsue, and had issue, the Kuni, Kaya, Asaka, Higashikuni and Nashimoto Imperial Families.
uqconnect.net /~zzhsoszy/states/japan/fushimi.html   (632 words)

  
 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Lynn plays at Shanghai Bistro at 8 p.m.
Masako Nashimoto Luttrell, left, Satomi Bernstein, Valerie Sylvester and Carol Pregill were on the scene Thursday when Bally celebrated the re-opening of its Ala Moana store with a fashionable champagne party.
The new store is in "fashion row" on the main mall level.
starbulletin.com /columnist/column.php?id=11778&col_id=49   (305 words)

  
 i52.html   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
PARTNER : Princess Nabeshima Itsuko [2 FEB 1882 - 1976]
Head of the Imperial House of Nashimoto 1947/1951
This page updated on 24 AUG 2003 : Database maintained by Henry Soszynski
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com /~royalty/japan/i52.html   (70 words)

  
 Japanese Web site venture launched - Pacific Business News (Honolulu):
But two Hawaii companies are going to do it.
A joint venture has been launched between the advertising and public relations agency Nashimoto and Associates LLC and the Internet service provider and computer consulting firm Veemo.com to do Web site and development in Japanese and English simultaneously.
Masako Nashimoto says his agency will do the creative development and Veemo, a start-up that provides computer maintenance support and system development in both languages, will handle the technical side of all joint projects.
www.bizjournals.com /pacific/stories/2001/02/12/daily14.html   (412 words)

  
 JBC -- Table of Contents (Jun 10 2005, 280, (23))
Andrew V. Samuelson, Masako Narita, Ho-Man Chan, Jianping Jin, Elisa de Stanchina, Mila E. McCurrach, Masashi Narita, Miriam Fuchs, David M. Livingston, and Scott W. Lowe
Hirotaka S. Shibata, Hiroaki Takaku, Masamichi Takagi, and Masayuki Nashimoto
The T Loop Structure Is Dispensable for Substrate Recognition by tRNase ZL
www.jbc.org /content/vol280/issue23/index.shtml   (3153 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.